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Authors: John Ramsey Miller

BOOK: The Last Family
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Rainey began screaming into the receiver. The words were blurred together, and the counterfeit doctor placed his hand over the receiver and smiled.

“Calm down, Rainey. There’s more, I’m afraid.” He spoke just loud enough for Rainey to hear. “It’s about Doris.”

“Please, don’t hurt Doris,” Rainey pleaded. “I’ll give you anything! Not Doris! Take
me.”

“She’s right here. Want to speak to her?”

“Martin …”

Martin Fletcher put the phone to her mouth.

“She can’t think of a thing to say. I’m not going to lie to you, Rainey. After all you’ve been through, I owe you the truth. She’s dead as an oyster shell. But she didn’t suffer. She’d suffered far too much already because of you. God, the guilt you must feel. But nothing to what Paul Masterson must feel. He’s the one who did all this, you know.”

The phone was silent as Rainey sat with his eyes unblinking.

“Are you still with me?”

“I’ll kill you! You filthy bastard!”

“That’s the spirit.”

“I swear, as God is my witness …”

Martin laughed. It was a staccato metallic rattle, half beast, half machine. “But, Rainey, he isn’t your witness. I want you and your pals to know that the old saying ‘Every dog has his day’ is the truth. Tell Paul all of this was for him. Tell him his true legacy is written in the hearts of his men. Do you love him now? Do you love your master, Rainey, knowing that he has killed your families? He still has his, Rainey. How does that make you feel?”

“Martin! I’ll … get you …” Rainey began bellowing obscenities blindly into the phone.

The counterfeit doctor hung up. Then he disconnected both receivers and laid the handsets on the bed, blocking the line to incoming calls. He retrieved his crutches and left the room carrying his case, shutting the door behind him.

Ted stood when the doctor came into the living room. Mary looked at him anxiously. “Will she be all right?”

Dr. Evans took Mary Broom’s hand and smiled. “She won’t wake for quite a while. I’ve just spoken to Rainey, and he assures me that he will be right along.”

“They’ve been through a lot,” Ted said. “We’re here for them.”

“Well, I’ve done all I can here. I’ll just see myself out.”

Ted went to the window and watched the doctor move down the street with his bag swinging at his side as he worked the crutches. He was like a measure of music that kept repeating as he continued to the end of the block and turned without once glancing back.

“Guess he must live close by.”

“How’s that?” Mary said.

“Well, he’s on foot, so to speak.”

By the time Martin Fletcher reached the car, the sound of sirens was in the air. He climbed into the Range Rover that he had stolen two days earlier. It was parked just around the corner from the Lee house. He hadn’t wanted anyone to get a description of the car just in case the cops got lucky. It was all he could do to keep the crutch tips touching the pavement. He fought the urge to throw them into the bushes and run. So Rainey had called 911.

When he got to the Rover, he tossed the physician’s kit and the crutches onto the rear seat. He took a quick look around to see if he had attracted any attention, and satisfied no one was watching, he drove away. As the car gathered speed, he started to remove the disguise, which was the most realistic, and by far the most expensive, masquerade of his career. He peeled off the wig and hand makeup, which was complete with small liver spots. Then he pulled over against the curb, removed the gray wig, and peeled off the latex face and turkey neck. He took off the blazer and tossed it onto the backseat as he accelerated and moved back into the street. Then he put the sunglasses and cap on. Seconds later a pair of prowl cars flew past headed for the Maple Street address. Martin had laid his Browning .380 on the console.

At the next red light he slipped on a London Fog golf jacket and combed his dark hair so it looked as if it had been painted on his skull. He removed the remnants of spirit gum with a cloth soaked in acetone. Then he put on his round-lensed sunshades and admired himself in the lighted mirror set in the visor.

He amused himself by trying to picture the confusion, the pain and the rage, that the neighbors would witness. He tried to imagine Rainey’s face when the Brooms told him that the killer was a seventy-year-old cripple. Rainey would know he had been disguised, but by then he’d be long gone.

He parked the Rover as close as possible to the DEA’s “secret” airport operation offices on the ground floor of the airport’s parking garage. The DEA airport operation posts were twin bunkers with darkly tinted windows built under the ramp that led to the upper-level parking deck. One had a chain-link fenced-in area for equipment storage. He climbed from the vehicle and removed a suitcase. Then he lifted the coat from the device on the floor behind the driver’s seat. It looked like a small cigar box and had wires leading to a small plastic cylinder that lay on the floor between two gallon jars. As he removed the lid of both jars, the smell of gasoline and the thickening agent hit him. He poured the gellike contents from the jars over the carpeting and then placed the electronic match, or omni switch, so that it was an inch or so above the level of the stuff, where the vapor would be ignited. Then there was a metal box with six sticks of Olin dynamite and a slow-burning fuse for the finale. He walked away toward the airport, carrying his suitcase. As he walked, he reached into his jacket pocket and flipped a toggle, which started the bomb’s liquid quartz watch timing device at 59:59.

Not more than a couple hundred yards away he opened the door to a battered Caprice and dropped the case onto the seat, crushing a park ranger’s hat. He slid in and smiled at the man who was leaning against the driver’s window with the bill of a baseball cap pulled down over his features. The man, who had been napping, stretched and looked at his watch.

“We should go,” Martin said. “We’ve got a long drive ahead of us.”

When the timer hit 00:00 a second short of one hour later, the battery in the cigar box made circuit and the omni
switch created its first and last spark. There was a bright flash and then the flames leaped through the Rover’s exploded windows and the homemade napalm spewed flame thirty feet in every direction. Within seconds the heat had caused the tanks of the automobiles on either side to explode, and a few seconds later another pair or three, until almost every car on the ground level was blazing, and thick smoke, colored black by burning rubber, poured from the open concrete structure. When the sticks of dynamite went off, they turned the windows of the vacant DEA bunkers to confetti.

4

T
O THE TOURISTS WHO FLOODED THE
C
AFÉ DU
M
ONDE IN THE
French Quarter he might have been a local as he sat sipping coffee with his back to the levee, facing Jackson Square. He looked like anything other than what he was. He was dressed casually, but expensively, and was reading the newspaper account that detailed the search for a multiple-murder suspect who had killed three people in Tennessee and covered his escape with a bomb. One composite looked like a child’s drawing of a man in a ranger’s hat, and the second a bad rendition of an elderly physician named Evans. To Martin Fletcher it looked like a drag queen dressed up for Halloween. The crude drawings made him want to laugh.

The newspaper article quoted a fire official as saying it was a miracle no one had been killed by the incendiary device planted at the airport, which had destroyed seventy-eight vehicles. It had taken several hours for the
Nashville fire department to put out the fire. The bombing itself was relegated to page two, since the article detailing the abduction and murder of George Lee and scout leader Ruth Tippet, and the overdosing of Doris Lee, covered most of page one. The picture of Rainey Lee seated on his home’s rear deck with his head buried in his hands warmed Martin’s heart.

He laid the paper aside, sipped at his coffee, and watched a couple with a small child at the next table. The child’s face and hands were covered in powdered sugar from the French doughnuts. The mother caught sight of him watching the child, so he smiled at the parents. “How old is she?” he asked.

“Four,” the mother said.

“I like benyenays,” the child giggled, holding a square with a perfect half-moon missing from one side.

“They’re called ben-yeahs,” her mother corrected.

“What’s your name, my little beauty?” he asked.

“Molly!” she squealed.

“I once had one just like you at home,” he said. “Children her age are so wonderful. But they can grow into troublesome adults.”

“Where’s home?” the man asked.

“Spain. Outside Madrid.”

“You don’t have a Latin accent,” the man said.

“I am an actor,” he replied, placing his fingers gingerly at his chest. “I have many accents and many languages. My grandfather was a Texan, my mother a saint—but aren’t they all?” He winked at the wife, who blushed.

“Might we have seen you in anything?” the man asked.

“Possibly,” he replied. “If you see Spanish or Italian cinema. I have yet to make it in Hollywood films. But I audition often enough, and who knows? Recently I played a doctor in a small production. A two-man play.”

They showed Martin a “gee, that’s too bad” smile and resumed their breakfast. “We’ll be watching for you,” the man said. The child made a pair of glasses with
her index fingers and thumbs, peering at Martin through them.

Martin opened his paper and spent the next few minutes reminiscing over the series of kills he had made during the past four years. While he did so, he remained aware of the people parading past the open-air café. As was his habit, he made an appraisal of each in relation to himself. This hunter was also hunted, a fact of life he could never lose sight of. He laid the paper aside, happy that the couple and child had moved on. Then he peeled the wrapping from a large cigar and lit it with a wooden kitchen match from his pocket.

The two ex-Greers and three McLeans had been easy enough. Hardest for him had been the little Lee girl, Eleanor. He had discovered early in his surveillance that she kept her imaginary treasures, everyday-found objects, in the shed that doubled as her playhouse. He had rigged the explosion so that it would look like a child-playing-with-matches accident. He’d taken the matches from the Lee kitchen himself when they were out and put them beside the lawn mower. A simple device insured that when she opened the door, it would tip a can filled with gasoline, and when she closed it again, a match struck and
voom
. The evidence of the booby trap—the fishing line, a plastic paint bucket, a mousetrap, and a piece of tape—were destroyed by the fire. He had assumed she would die at once. It was both good and bad that she had lingered. Good because it gave Rainey a chance to twist in the horror of it, bad that the innocent child had suffered so long. But so it went. The innocent suffered for the sins of the parents.

The Green Team members from Miami were suffering hell, and now they’d blame Paul Masterson, as they should. He wished he could see the confrontation between the men and their old boss, and he tried to imagine Paul’s reaction when he heard about the latest killings.
Surely he’s been keeping up—so why hasn’t he shown?
It was a perplexing question. Martin had challenged him openly now, and he would have to come.
Unless he’s even more of a coward than I imagined
. He
wanted to show Paul the cold hearts of his wife and children.

He put a set of earphones in place and switched on the Walkman in his pocket. He listened to the latest tapes he had retrieved, concentrating on the voices of the woman, Laura, and her two children, Adam and Erin. Soon the work would be done. He closed his eyes and thought sadly about his own wife and child and their deaths at the hands of hired killers. And then he let his creative side take over, and he freed his mind to dream of how he would deal with the last family.

5

T
HE TWO MEN WHO STEPPED INTO THE NARROW DIRT STREET FROM
the Ford Explorer were trouble. Aaron Clark, alone in his general store, knew it as soon as he saw them. He watched as they looked the town over and then turned their attention to his store. They came inside with the demeanor of gunslingers, sweeping the store with cold, measuring eyes. Aaron, who had been sorting mail, cut his eyes to the short-barreled Wingmaster pump shotgun that lay under the counter. You just never know—he had learned that from years of living on the edge of nowhere. The men were wearing military-style eyeglasses, new hunting boots, and factory-stiff canvas game jackets. Aaron knew they weren’t fly fishermen, and elk and mule deer weren’t in season for a spell. Aaron assumed the coats were hiding handguns.

Aaron Clark had lived high in the clouds over Montana for sixty-eight years. His store, Clark’s Reward General
Merchandise, comprised six low log buildings built one into the other over the course of 120 years. The bulk of his business came from loggers, sportsmen, and the few full-time residents. Mountain people were clannish, but they could abide visiting sportsmen as long as they were well behaved—didn’t shoot livestock, take too many trout, try to make the local women, and didn’t overstay their welcome. Lumberjacks? Well, on the weekends you gave them elbow room and prayed they kept their knives folded and their motor-driven saws in their trucks. Years before Aaron had been forced to kill one who was attempting to saw off the head of the bartender with a knife for refusing to sell him a fifteenth glass of bourbon. Luckily the knife had been dull and there had been time for a barmaid to fetch Aaron. There were still nine buckshot holes in one wall of the saloon where the pattern overestimated the size of the man.

There was a constable who lived fifteen miles away, the county’s sheriff three times that far. The killing of the lumberjack was ruled death by misadventure. The bartender’s neck took sixty stitches but healed eventually, and the locals called him Frankenstein because it looked as if his head had been hastily added to his torso. The residents of Clark’s Reward, Montana, were the serious sort, and even the drunkest of loggers would have to be mighty desperate to challenge any of them. The local axiom was, “If a boy can’t shoot the heart out of a running deer by the time he’s three, he’s considered retarded.”

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